Racing the Street traces the history of how race was used as a technology for gathering, assembling, and networking the early cosmopolitan city. Drawing on an archive that ranges from engineering blueprints and parliamentary committee reports to sensationalistic pamphlets and periodical press accounts, Robert J. Topinka conducts an original genealogy of the nineteenth-century London street, demonstrating how race as a technology gathers, sorts, and assembles the teeming particularities of the street into a manageable network. This interdisciplinary study offers a novel approach to the intersections of race, rhetoric, media, technology, and urban government.
Robert J. Topinka is Lecturer in Transnational Media and Cultural Studies at Birkbeck, University of London and recipient of an Arts and Humanities Research Council grant for the project, Politics, Ideology, and Rhetoric in the 21st Century: The Case of the Alt-Right.
Title: Racing the Street (Rhetoric & Public Culture: History, Theory, Critique)
Author: Topinka, Robert J.
ISBN: 9780520343610
Binding:
Publisher: University of California Press
Publication Date: 2020-08-21
Number of Pages: 196
Weight: 0.2722 kg
The primary virtue of this book is Topinka's lucid and profound analyses. . . . Essentially insightful and provides a new take on matters of much relevance. * Journal of British Studies *